

Stars: Owen Wilson, Cristela Alonzo, Chris Cooper, Nathan Fillion, Larry the Cable Guy, Armie Hammer Also, Michael Caine plays a British spy car, which would be kind of fun if this whole thing wasn’t so taxing. The biggest blunder, though, might be the film’s heavy focus on Mater, a character that truly tests the audience’s tolerance of the comedic stylings of Larry the Cable Guy. It’s a huge left turn following the first film, which could be a good thing if not for the haphazard storytelling and tired humor. Cars plucks our talking vehicles out of the dusty town of Radiator Springs and sends them on a globe-trotting adventure wherein Mater (Larry the Cable Guy) gets embroiled in a high-stakes espionage mission filled with spies and conspiracies that spell trouble for the World Grand Prix that Lightning McQueen (Owen Wilson) is preparing to race in. This was the first dose of the studio putting out something that at one time would have felt beneath their standards, and the first time that the rampant creativity that defined their films wasn’t always a surefire guarantee. If Cars was Pixar’s first minor stumble, Cars 2 was the widespread evidence that they weren’t immune from making a flat-out bad movie. Stars: Owen Wilson, Larry the Cable Guy, Tony Shalhoub, Guido Quaroni, Bonnie Hunt, John Ratzenberger, Michael Caine, Emily Mortimer, John Turturro, Eddie Izzard, Thomas Kretschmann We’ve ranked every Pixar movie, at least among its feature-length output.


Not every Pixar movie has been a masterpiece, but thanks to the imaginations of people like John Lasseter, Pete Docter, Brad Bird and Andrew Stanton, the studio has made a habit of delighting audiences of all ages-never an easy task. Anthropomorphic bugs, monsters, ocean creatures and cars followed, eventually leading Disney to purchase the company for a whopping $7.4 billion in 2006. With its origins as the computer graphics division of Lucasfilm in 1979, it was spun off into its own corporation funded by Steve Jobs seven years later with the release of a short animated film called Luxo Jr., featuring Pixar’s now iconic desk lamp.īut it was Toy Story, a movie about a toy cowboy named Woody and his newly arrived rival, Buzz Lightyear, that made Pixar a household name. Since launching with the revolutionary Toy Story in 1995, Pixar has released more than two dozen movies and the studio’s consistency has been astounding, delivering hit after hit. Incredible can be won from the Prize Machine for 100 coins, won from the Pixel Prize Machine for 500 pixels, or purchased for $4.49. Incredible, whenever he hits an obstacle, he punches it and it becomes rubble. He has blonde hair with a black face mask. Incredible is a relatively overweight man with a red and black suit with black gloves and the Incredibles logo.
